Saw this today and thought of you - @Chrissyreadit and @Crazeedi ! Just settling in for a digestive and ginger nut! 🤣🤣
Saw this today and thought of you - @Chrissyreadit and @Crazeedi ! Just settling in for a digestive and ginger nut! 🤣🤣
When I mention that I've been reading a history of biscuits, people's usual response is confusion about why that would take a whole book or be particularly interesting. The answer is that Collingham discusses the social, economic and political circumstances surrounding the development of biscuits, and though the subtitle calls it a “British indulgence“, it discusses other countries too and the colonial uses of biscuits (yes, really). Loved it.
I expect this book to make me hungry, but it opens with discussion of the original savoury biscuits, which were just dried bread. It's very weird to think about most of your bread being dried out in the residual heat of the oven, and fresh bread being a rarity. Once it was dried out, it'd keep for ages, so that some communities only made bread a couple of times a year. It doesn't sound super nice to me, used to modern bread!
Biscuit can't believe they wrote a book about her! She's only two years old... such achievements! #BunniesofLitsy
Why, yes I AM reading about the history of the biscuit. 😂😂
I really enjoyed Curry (another of this author‘s books on food history) and this one has been fun to flip through so far, too.